Outgoing President Emmanuel Macron, under increasing pressure from Marine Le Pen in the polls for the second round of the presidential election, attacked his far-right rival on Friday, two days before the first round in France, marked by many uncertainties.
• Read also: Putin targets Donbass for ‘May 9 victory’, Macron says
• Read also: Le Pen wants to sanction the wearing of the veil with a fine
• Read also: Presidential in France: the battle hardens between Macron and Le Pen
Marine Le Pen is proposing a “misleading”, “racist” program accused the candidate president, who saw his lead in the polls melt away, both for the 1st and 2nd rounds on April 24.
“Febrility” retorted the leader of the far right.
- Listen to Mathieu Bock-Côté at the microphone of Richard Martineau on QUB radio:
“I challenge him to find a single proposal in my program that discriminates against the French because of their origin, their religion or the color of their skin because that is racism”.
According to the polls, the two finalists of the 2017 election are the best placed to qualify on Sunday, even if the leader of the radical left Jean-Luc Mélenchon is also surfing, like Ms. Le Pen, on a positive dynamic.
In the event of a repeat of this duel, five polls on Friday gave a very narrow victory in the second round to the outgoing president on April 24, with scores of 51 to 54%.
The nine other contenders seem relegated, but uncertainty remains, particularly because, warns political scientist Pascal Perrineau, “this is the first election that has reached such a rate of people who are undecided, who have changed their opinion, roughly one out of two French people.
“It’s taking shape vaguely, but frankly I think that in the voting booth, it will be at the last moment”, explained Friday in a Parisian market Jeanne Di Mascio, a 38-year-old music teacher.
Anesthetized by the conflict in Ukraine, the campaign, which had started without relief, has regained interest in the last few days as the hypothesis of a victory for Marine Le Pen has taken shape, which would be both the first woman and the first far-right representative to become president.
“Everyone is laughing”
The daughter of Jean-Marie Le Pen, a figure of the French far right for decades, has managed to smooth the once abrasive image of her party, while leading a convincing campaign on purchasing power, the number one priority of the population at a time when inflation is rising, boosted by the war in Ukraine.
Some candidates have already announced the position they will adopt on Sunday evening: the communist Fabien Roussel and the ecologist Yannick Jadot will block Ms. Le Pen and Valérie Pécresse (traditional right), will not give instructions, but will say for whom she will vote in the second round.
Despite everything, abstention, which tends to increase regularly in France, should remain very high.
Many political scientists fear that the record of April 21, 2002 (28.4%), the highest level ever recorded for a first round of a presidential election, could be beaten, much more than in 2017 (22.2% ) which was already not a good vintage.
“Around me, no one votes and everyone is grumbling,” lamented Christine Mazaud, a 75-year-old retiree, in a Parisian market.
Artichoke
From midnight, Paris time, silence will fall over the countryside. Public meetings, distribution of leaflets and digital propaganda of the candidates will be prohibited. No interviews, polls or estimated results may be published before the results on Sunday at 8:00 p.m. (6:00 p.m. GMT).
Some suitors could however appear publicly on Saturday during demonstrations. “Marches for the future” are announced everywhere in France at the initiative of left-wing organizations.
In the meantime, the candidates devoted themselves to media interventions or small trips to try to convince the 48.7 million French people called to the polls.
Emmanuel Macron thus made a short impromptu visit to a market in Neuilly-sur-Seine, on the outskirts of Paris, on Friday morning, after an interview on Parisian radio RTL. He was to speak on the online media Brut, popular with young people, in the evening.
For 45 minutes, the candidate president interacted with merchants, customers and municipal employees. He left with a bouquet offered for his wife Brigitte.
Marine Le Pen was in Narbonne in the south of France, also on a market, where she presented herself as the candidate for “la France calme”.
A glass of rosé in hand, she said she did not feel “dizzy” from a possible victory, and added: “The artichoke is eaten leaf by leaf, first the first round, after the second”.